Newport agrees to take to the road
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June Casagrande
The Corona del Mar Vision Plan improvements won an important victory
Tuesday night as council members approved a controversial plan to
take ownership of a portion of Coast Highway.
Supporters of the beautification and safety plan for Coast Highway
have long argued that Caltrans’ ownership of the highway makes it
nearly impossible to get permissions to get the work done.
“Caltrans just doesn’t care about us as we care about ourselves,”
said John Blom, chairman of the Corona del Mar Business Improvement
District, creator of the vision plan. “That highway divides our city
right in half and it prevents us from being a village.”
At the beginning of Tuesday night’s talks, council members were
similarly divided over the plan. Some, including Gary Adams and Mayor
Tod Ridgeway, said that the $3.5 million that Caltrans had offered to
hand over wasn’t nearly enough to cover repairs and maintenance of
the road. But dozens of supporters waving placards in the audience
and a long line of Corona del Mar boosters who addressed the council
convinced all but one of the council members to support the transfer.
“Mine was a reluctant vote,” said Adams, who is also a traffic
engineer. “I went into the meeting expecting to oppose it. And I am
still convinced we could accomplish a lot of what the Vision 2004
folks want to accomplish under Caltrans ownership. I think probably
what persuaded me was the larger local control issue. I think there
is a value there.”
Despite all the support from Corona del Mar, the lone holdout was
Dick Nichols, the councilman who represents the area.
Nichols and other council members worried that the ongoing cost of
maintaining the stretch of Coast Highway from Newport Coast Drive to
Jamboree Road well outweighed the $3.5 million to be paid to the city
by Caltrans. That figure represents the amount of work that Caltrans
believes the roadway needs right now.
Some also worried that the legal liability to the city would be
too great. But that worry was assuaged somewhat by city staff who
explained that the city’s insurance would cover many instances up to
$26 million after a $500,000 deductible.
Public Works Director Steve Badum estimated that it would cost the
city an average of about $700,000 a year to maintain the road.
Council members agreed to put the $3.5 million in an account for
future repairs, carefully watching how it’s spent.
The vote means that the median landscaping, new crosswalks, street
furniture and other aesthetic and safety improvements that comprise
the Corona del Mar Vision plan will face a lot less red tape.
“This is a plan that was supported wholeheartedly by Corona del
Mar businesses and residents association,” community member and city
Parks Commissioner Debra Allen said. “It’s a magnificent vision and
Caltrans relinquishment is central to that vision.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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